Rail Freight is dead, its just too restrictive for delivery, always will be. Road will always be cheaper and more flexible, so no one will use rail.
LOL,
Rail freight has grown massively over the last 15 years.
You have to look beyond your small packages and think about the bulk freight, the stone, ore, coal etc.....
Also consider that container traffic arrives at a major port and then needs moving to ditribution centres which is also best achieved by rail for multiple container loads.
I still dont buy it Lizzie, the line has been thought up based on where it will get the least objections.
All it can do is move stuff from just outside London (because you cant support a freight terminal along its route within the capital) to just north of Birmingham which is of little use.
If it linked to HS1 (which it doesn't) then it may offer some freight benefits with goods passing through the tunnel but it doesn't.
And anyway, freight does not need high speed lines (although thelr loading gauge would be useful) so the only hope would be to move passenger traffic off the West coast line to free up capacity to allow more freight operations.
So we are back to a high speed line that does not go any where
First Mark I would accept that point of new railways today go where there are least objections, which it completely against the old, original principles, of this method of transport; to go where the maximum trade will be.
However, the experience of all railway construction is that where railways go, property and industrial development will follow eventually. For instance one of many examples is here in Ashford. The original coming of the railway 'woke up' this market town and led to additional industrial trade and population. Now in the 21st century the town is developing fast on the back of high speed train routes to the continent via the Channel Tunnel. Industrial units, along with housing, are springing up everywhere. Why should this not happen to areas of the North, bringing jobs and prosperity?
Of course I am a long and faithful supporter of the railways, and am biased towards the idea of increasing dramatically freight movement especially. To me it will always be obvious that the railways are by far the most efficient form of transport, but only fails to appeal to many potential passengers due to the shameful decline of the many lines that used to link almost every key town, so that any journey involves a disjointed and non-viable route, and thus makes it a far from appealing option

.
So for me any new railway should be celebrated and embraced as a significant advance on what we have now, with almost "back to the future" progress, remembering that in 1930 the UK had the historically maximum 20,445 route miles open to traffic, which by the 1970s had fallen to 11,798 route miles, and currently hovers around 10,408 route miles.
The expansion possible to again link all main commercial centres and key areas of population is therefore staggering!!
